CHICAGO (CBS) — Chicago will pay millions to two victims of former police Cmdr. Jon Burge’s torture, while former Mayor Richard M. Daley will not have to testify in the cases.

As WBBM Newsradio’s Nancy Harty reports, the Chicago Tribune says the City Council Finance Committee approved over $7 million in settlements with two men who collectively spent nearly 50 years in prison for crimes they say they confessed to after torture by police detectives at Burge’s direction.

The settlements must be approved by the full City Council at its meeting on Wednesday.

One of the men, Michael Tillman, served more than 23 years behind bars for the 1986 murder and rape of a South Side woman, and he says he was beaten, hit with a telephone book, and had his head covered with a plastic bag by the detectives, the Tribune reported. His conviction was tossed in 2010.

The other man, David Fauntleroy, spent 25 years in prison for a 1983 murder and also said he was tortured, the newspaper reported. His conviction was also tossed.

Flint Taylor, an attorney for Tillman, expressed disappointment at the fact that Daley will not have to testify, the newspaper reported.

In a statement quoted by both the Tribune and Chicago Sun-Times, Tillman himself said in part, “I am sorry that Mayor Daley will not be questioned in my case, but that does not change the fact that he did me and my family wrong.”

Taylor tells the Sun-Times that Daley, who was serving as Cook County State’s Attorney during many of the Burge torture cases, remains a central figure in the scandal and a potential witness in many future torture cases.

At the time, Taylor told WBBM Newsradio: “We want to find out from him and question him in detail about his knowledge of the police torture scandal starting in 1982 when he was the state’s attorney and we want to question him about his specific knowledge of the Michael Tillman case and his approval of the death penalty in Michael Tillman’s case.”

Last year, U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer ruled that Daley should remain as a defendant in Tillman’s lawsuit because the immunity did not extend to his time as mayor.

Since Burge was fired from the Police Department in 1993, his name has become synonymous with police brutality in Chicago.

Dozens of suspects accused Burge and the detectives under their command of shocking them with a homemade electrical device, suffocating them with typewriter bags, putting guns to their head and playing Russian roulette — all to force them to confess to murders they didn’t commit.

Already in prison for the murder of his third wife, former Bolingbrook cop Drew Peterson on Tuesday pleaded not guilty to charges he tried to hire a hitman to kill the prosecutor who put him behind bars.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel threw cold water on the Chicago Cubs’ request to begin working on Wrigley Field renovations around the clock, after cold winter weather significantly delayed construction of new bleachers.

After “48 Hours” uncovered evidence that casts doubt on the verdict that sent a teacher to prison for the death of a 16-month-old boy, the Lake County Coroner was calling for authorities to reopen the case.

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